Teahouse on the Tracks (Alastair Reynolds)
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Wednesday, 6 August 2008
Not the most organised of people
Now Playing: Still Walter Becker

Lately I've become very poor at dealing with correspondence, for which many apologies. I hit a difficult patch after Christmas, which meant that I was finding it unusually hard to finish, or even get started on, various projects. It had nothing to do with anything going on in my life, except perhaps as the fallout from a difficult and stressful year involving relocation to the UK. Whatever - the point was, I hit some roadblocks, and work wasn't going as smoothly as I'd have liked. I've talked a bit about this in a podcast which will be going out as part of StarShipSofa in a little while. The upshot was that - after I got back from Minneapolis - I badly needed to get some focus and cut out distractions. That's a large part of why I removed my email address from the website - not because I didn't appreciate the feedback (most of the emails I received were interesting and welcome, and generally very kind, and very few encouraged me to go and kill myself) but simply because dealing with them was swallowing more and more of my time, even after I'd made it clear that I wasn't necessarily going to respond to everything. (In fact, I think I still responded to 95% of all emails).

However, that's not really the point of this update. Very occasionally, I do get actual mail, forwarded on via my agent or publisher. Again, they're mostly very welcome. I've received some crank material, but I doubt that there are many SF writers who haven't.  The problem, though, is that I'm just as chronically bad at dealing with this form of correspondence as I am with the electronic variety. A case in point - and I really hope she's reading this - would be the nice letter I received from a young lady called Megan some time ago. I put it aside with the intention of replying ... and then didn't, and time went by, and now - even though I swear I knew where the letter was - I can't find it. I'm still hoping I'll turn it up, of course. But I feel an apology is due. At least with emails I can go back into my inbox and theoretically locate any that I haven't responded to, but a physical letter is a different matter.

 So. Much grovelling from me, and due apologies to anyone else who's still waiting on me for anything.

Veering in a completely different direction, I'm taking guitar lessons. On one level, it's an admission of failure. I got a guitar 14 years ago (ta, mum). I got some books and started teaching myself how to play. I kept doing this for another 14 years. I got a bit better, working slowly through the exercises. I enjoyed myself tremendously, but - a year or two ago - it began to dawn on me that I wasn't really improving, at least not at any measurable rate. And while I could sort of read music, I had an almost hopeless lack of understanding of basic theory - scales, key signatures and suchlike. What I could play, I'd more or less figured out by a painful process of memorisation.  So it was time to do something about it. The tipping point was the Telecaster I treated myself to after the House of Suns signing in Forbidden Planet - that and spotting an advert for guitar lessons in a shop window.

So now, once week, I get on my bike and cycle around to Richard. Richard's a nice young guy who can play just about anything - he's classically trained, but likes Steely Dan and death metal. And under Richard's guidance I think I've learned more in the last couple of months than in the 14 years since I got my first guitar. I'm still crap, of course. But it's a different, more refined crap. Right now the reason my fingers feel like the ends have been sawn off is "Prelude" by Matteo Carcassi, and I'm having a blast. Maybe because I don't have a musical bone in my body, I'm enjoying it all the more. And I'm doing it because I want to, not because I'm made to do it by a teacher.


Posted by voxish at 11:34 PM MEST
Updated: Thursday, 7 August 2008 12:07 AM MEST
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Monday, 4 August 2008
We got the Steely Dan t-shirts
Now Playing: Walter Becker

Walter Becker has a new album out. It's called Circus Money and is his first solo release since 1994. This can only be a good thing.

Have you ever bought an album on the basis of who produced it? If the answer's no, then I'm willing to bet you're not a Steely Dan fan. If you are, on the other hand, then you may well have bought Zazu, Rosie Vela's one and only album, purely on the basis that Fagen and Becker were on it, reunited for the first time since 1980's Gaucho. Or you may own albums by China Crisis or Fra Lippo Lippi that wouldn't otherwise form part of your collection, because Becker produced and played on them.

Since 1982, Fagen has maintained a blazingly productive output of approximately one solo album per decade. Becker, by contrast, has recorded a scorching two albums in the same time interval. Of course, there's the not insignificant matter of Steely Dan reforming in the mid nineties, but even allowing for their two new studio albums (or is it three? I can't remember) they can hardly be accused of flooding the market. Which makes Becker's new one all the more welcome, and I for one expect to be enjoying it for at least a decade.

Oh, and the title of this blog? A Fagen song, of course.


Posted by voxish at 3:10 PM MEST
Updated: Monday, 4 August 2008 3:51 PM MEST
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The Big Issue; the Dakota thing etc
Now Playing: Mouse on Mars

It turns out that, rather than running a special issue of Welsh fiction, The Big Issue Cymru is running one story per issue - and that these stories have already started appearing. I hadn't managed to buy a copy for a few weeks (until I picked one up on Friday, just before going to see Wall-E*)  but I'm presuming they haven't run my piece yet. The upshot of this is that I may not be able to give very much notice of when the relevant issue appears, but I'll do my best.

Over on rec.arts.sf.written, there have lately been a couple of queries concerning errors or anomalies in my fiction. One that's come up many times in correspondence is the cock-up in "Diamond Dogs" where I referred to one, rather than two, as the first prime number.  There's no excuse for this; it was just pure stupidity on my part.

Much the same can be said for the Dakota thing in CENTURY RAIN. As part of her alibi, Verity tells people that she's from Dakota, without specifying whether she means North or South. Some people have even speculated that this is a hint that the entire book is embedded in an alternate history. Would that I were that clever, alas. The truth is, while fully aware that North and South Dakota are separate states, I just didn't realise that no US citizen would ever refer to Dakota as a larger entity formed from the two states. Another error in that book, one that's been pointed out to me more than once, is the reference to a Molotov cocktail - unlikely in a world where WW2 fizzled out just after the Ardennes offensive.

I really ought to create some kind of web page where I list these (and other) cock-ups. I'm certainly not proud of them, but at the same time I've come to realise that in writing big, multifaceted SF novels, it's almost impossible not to get some stuff tragically wrong.

 * - loved Wall-E, by the way. Pure sense-of-wonder...


Posted by voxish at 11:17 AM MEST
Updated: Monday, 4 August 2008 11:38 AM MEST
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Monday, 21 July 2008
Books
Now Playing: What I put on my MP3 six months ago

Just a reminder that Chris Beckett's excellent new collection, "The Turing Test", will be out from Elastic Press in a couple of weeks. If you've been reading Interzone - or any number of other SF short fiction venues in the last fifteen or so years - you'll need no further recommendation. If you've somehow missed out on Chris's work, this is a great chance to catch up on this thoughtful and underrated writer.

www.elasticpress.com.

In other news, that all-round good bloke Jeff Vandermeer gave a nice plug to The Prefect on the Omnivoracious blog.

Finally- and more on this when I'm done - I'm reading Paul McAuley's new novel THE QUIET WAR and enjoying it tremendously. It's exactly the kind of clever, densely-detailed, colourful, medium-term future tour-of-the-solar-system hard SF/space opera mashup that rocks my world. Even better, it's only the first half of a two-book story.


Posted by voxish at 11:12 AM MEST
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Thursday, 17 July 2008
Song for a future generation
Now Playing: The B52s

During the eighties I found most American "rock" to be nearly unlistenable.  I did like Steely Dan and Little Feat, but they were both defunct by the time I cottoned onto them. I did like Husker Du, but they were on the verge of finishing. REM were interesting, but I didn't really warm to them until Green (which isn't to say I didn't go back and get into the earlier albums; I just wasn't ready for them at the time).

But one ray of sunshine, for me at least, lay in the B52s - here was clever, modern sounding music that pulled off the difficult trick of not taking itself too seriously, yet which was at the same time capable of being sad and funny and exciting. I loved Bouncing off the Satellites, and pounced on Cosmic Thing as soon as it was released. The B52s went on to score a number of big hits from that album, and for a little they were public property. Yet by the time they made a follow-up album, 1992's fantastic and underrated Good Stuff, you sensed that interest had rather moved on. I never stopped liking them, but as the years went by, it seemed increasingly unlikely that the band would record another album. Never write off a good act, though - even though 16 years is enough of a gap to make The Blue Nile look prolific - because the B52s have returned with a scorchingly good record, Funplex, that sounds more or less as if it was recorded fifteen minutes after the last one. And I mean that in a good way. Fred sounds exactly like Fred; Keith plays some phenomenal guitar, Kate's voice is as great as ever and - as if it couldn't get any better - Cindy is now back in the line-up.

I think they tend to be written off as something of a bouncy, happy-go-lucky novelty act, but - if you can be bothered to pay attention, and look beyond the campy titles - there's an awful lot more going on. I just hope we don't have to wait another 16 years for the next one.


Posted by voxish at 10:21 PM MEST
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Sunday, 6 July 2008
New Rose
Now Playing: The Damned

Last night the BBC transmitted the last in the present series of Doctor Who, concluding the two-parter begun last week. I didn't catch it yesterday, but was able to watch it this morning on the BBC's iplayer service. The much heralded return of Davros was a delight, and - scientific bollocks notwithstanding - I thought that the conclusion worked very well. Good to see the Daleks back en masse, rather than as a few stragglers.

I knew Rose was coming back, by the way. My dad works near Southerndown beach, which is where the original "Parting of the Ways" scene (supposedly set in Norway) was shot in 2006. If you're from this part of the world, it's an instantly recognisable place. When he told me they'd been filming there again, the only possible explanation was Rose's return.

I also clocked Castell Coch as the castle in the German scenes - again, it's instantly recognisable. Very appropriate too, given its teutonic, fairy-tale appearance. I can't help but assume that the entire "Martha teleports to Germany" subplot was put in there purely as an excuse to make use of this iconic location. My sister got married there, as it happens. One of the many joys of the New Who, in fact, has been spotting Cardiff and S.Wales locations, whether they're intended to be Wales or elsewhere.

Onward to Christmas, and the Return of the Cybermen. 


Posted by voxish at 4:44 PM MEST
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Wednesday, 25 June 2008
The Big Issue Cymru
Now Playing: Death Cab for Cutie

"Cardiff Afterlife", a story of mine, will appear in a special Welsh-themed fiction issue of "The Big Issue Cymru". My story is a kind of sequel to my earlier "Signal to Noise" from ZIMA BLUE, although this new one, at 3000 words, is considerably shorter. The fiction in this issue has been compiled by top crime writer John Williams, and I'll post more details when I know when the issue will be going on sale. Obviously, you won't  be able to get it outside of Wales - but hey, Wales is a nice place and we only charge admission coming in, not leaving.

In other news ... well, there is no other news. I'm just beavering away on the new book. Reading: CARTER BEATS THE DEVIL, by Glen David Gold. Listening: a new Creedence compilation, The Fall (as ever), Von Sudenfed, the aforementioned Death Cab for Cutie.

 


Posted by voxish at 2:29 PM MEST
Updated: Wednesday, 25 June 2008 2:40 PM MEST
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Thursday, 5 June 2008
Recenter developments
Now Playing: Discipline - King Crimson

StarShipSofa, who already did an excellent podcast of "The Sledge-Maker's Daughter", have given the same treatment to my considerably shorter story Fresco.

You can listen to it here. Cheers, lads.


Posted by voxish at 9:26 PM MEST
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Monday, 2 June 2008
Recent developments
Now Playing: Mudcrutch

I really should have posted an update in May, but there would have been precious little to report other than that I was busy with various projects. I finished and sold an 11,000 word novelette, "Fury", for inclusion in the second volume  of Jonathan Strahan's Eclipse series of all-original, non-themed SF anthologies. I signed more than 2000 signature sheets for two different limited editions - Subterranean Press's forthcoming version of my story "The Six Directions of Space", and the Easton Press's leatherbound version of THE PREFECT. I also read and enjoyed the forthcoming Chris Beckett collection THE TURING TEST (Elastic Press) and wrote an introduction for it. Chris's book is is coming out in August, so get your orders in now.

I made tentative inroads on the new book, which has now been scheduled for October 2009, with the UK edition of ZIMA BLUE appearing in the spring. No title as yet, and I'm not telling anyone what it's about just now, other than to say that it will be another standalone.

 Now that we're into early June (bloody hell), North American readers should finally be able to get their hands on the ACE edition of THE PREFECT. I'm sorry that it's taken so long, but there really doesn't seem to be anything to be done about the lag for now. Of course, even HOUSE OF SUNS is beginning to feel like old news to me, and it'll be another year again before the US edition appears. Maybe there'll be a chance to narrow the gap with book 9 - we'll see what happens. All of which, of course, assumes that my US publisher will continue to pick up the option on my books - finger crossed, etc, and due thanks to those readers who continue to buy copies.

Little else to report. I finally scored a copy of Mudcrutch, the new album by Tom Petty's first band (before the Heartbreakers), who have now reconvened to splendid effect. I really like Petty's stuff - he's massively underrated.  His last solo album,  "Highway Companion" has hardly been off my CD player since it came out. Reading: several months worth of old New Yorkers, New Scientists, and Salman Rushdie's first novel.

Still enjoying Doctor Who.

 

 


Posted by voxish at 8:22 PM MEST
Updated: Monday, 2 June 2008 8:53 PM MEST
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Wednesday, 30 April 2008
Sontar - ha!

They're back. I'm a very happy man.


Posted by voxish at 1:19 PM MEST
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